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Tailwind Slows: Doubts About Argentina's FX Market in Second Half of 2026

23/06/2026 19:24 - Economia

A Shift in Argentina's Currency Market

The dominant perception in Argentina's financial market has begun to shift. Until recently, traders trusted a scenario where US dollars flowed endlessly. However, the reality of H2 2026 paints a different picture: the "tailwind" that propelled the foreign exchange market is starting to lose momentum.

The repeated government phrase - "dollars are overflowing" - now coexists with data showing a deceleration in foreign currency inflows. Economy Minister Luis Caputo maintains his optimistic discourse, but the Central Bank's numbers tell a different story.

Key Numbers Raising Concerns

Indicator April-May 2026 June 2026
BCRA Daily Purchases $138 million (average) $79 million (average)
Wholesale Dollar Rise - 3.8% (to $1,461 ARS)
Accumulated Monthly Rise - 5.1%
Private Sector Monthly Demand Over $2 billion

Official Dollar & Exchange Gaps

As of June 22, 2026, the official dollar trades at $1,480 ARS (sell) and $1,430 ARS (buy). The blue dollar (informal market) stood at $1,480 ARS, matching the official rate - a historic convergence.

The distance from the ceiling of the exchange rate band remains comfortable at 22.5%, according to PPI analysis.

Reserves & Country Risk

BCRA reserves remain solid at USD 47.508 billion. Country risk hit 425 basis points, the lowest since April 2018.

However, household delinquency reached 12.1% in April 2026, the highest since 2004, with 5.3 million people with irregular credit status.

Why Are Dollar Inflows Slowing?

1Agricultural Seasonality

The market anticipates the end of the "cosecha gruesa" (main harvest season), when dollar flows from agricultural exports naturally decrease. Argentina is a major global exporter of soybeans, corn, and wheat, making agricultural exports a critical source of foreign currency.

2Adverse International Context

Oil prices, which weeks ago traded near $110/barrel, now sit below $80/barrel. This drop directly impacts energy revenue projections, especially considering Vaca Muerta's growing role in Argentine exports (up 167% year-over-year).

The Iran-US agreement of June 17, 2026 (14-point memorandum) includes reopening the Strait of Hormuz within 30 days, potentially stabilizing international energy prices.

3Federal Reserve Rates

New Fed Chair Kevin Warsh maintained the benchmark rate at 3.75% annually, but projections show half of the board expects at least one additional increase in 2026. Futures markets assign an 89% probability to this monetary tightening.

Government's Stance

Despite signs of exchange pressure, the national government shows no excessive concern about the dollar's slide. They interpret it as a normalization process rather than stress.

The government authorized this month a dollar increase above inflation expectations: while the dollar moved 3.8%, June's CPI could land at 2%, or even one tenth below.

Private estimates indicate no significant BCRA intervention, neither in futures markets nor through "dollar-linked" instruments to curb this rise.

Outlook for H2 2026

EconViews

"This isn't a concerning rise, quite the opposite: we see it as positive that the peso stops falling behind and recovers some ground," stated Miguel Kiguel. The report highlights that the government wouldn't show excessive concern about the exchange movement.

PPI (Portfolio Personal Investments)

Emiliano Anselmi noted that the accumulated 5.1% rise in the last month "more than doubles the yields on peso-denominated debt in all variants." PPI warns this will be a key week to monitor the exchange rate.

Broader Economic Context

Argentina's economy grew 0.7% in Q1 2026, driven by the energy sector (Neuquén province increased exports 103.5% in January-May), manufacturing, and services.

June inflation is estimated at 2.1%. Energy exports project reaching USD 11 billion in 2026, with a trade surplus near USD 9.7 billion. This represents a remarkable turnaround for an economy that has historically struggled with dollar shortages.

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Alfredo S. Quiroga